Slavoj Zizek - Calvinism is Christianity at its Purest

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • The flamboyant Slovenian philosopher discusses Calvinist (Reformed) Christianity.

Комментарии • 69

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Год назад +4

    4:36 *The highest freedom is assuming inner necessity* “I think that this retroactive constitution of necessity is the key to predestination. Predestination doesn’t mean _’we are not free’._ Predestination means that we are, at a much more radical level, _’free to constitute our very predestination’._ Because that’s the paradox of freedom […] true freedom is in a way to choose your necessity.”

  • @natewikman
    @natewikman 3 года назад +9

    6:30 is super insightful. In that our most free acts are almost compulsory, and bringing out that tension

    • @CriticallyAlive
      @CriticallyAlive Год назад +1

      Key word being almost for me, the word almost is what separates predestination from his vision of true freedom in my view. The fact that it is almost is why I simply can’t make the leap into predestination. This reactionary post-action view of predestination from hindsight is called rationalization in the real world and is showing more an inability to explain an event based on certain importance biases than showing any kind of actual predestination. Not to mention the real world dangers involved in legitimizing, even in small ways, the ideas of predestination. Having that legitimacy has incredibly damaging effects on the real world, despite, I think, also being untrue.

    • @natewikman
      @natewikman Год назад +1

      @@CriticallyAlive That's probably true to an extent, though I don't think something being predetermined and it having known causes are mutually exclusive. Take physical beauty for example, it's largely based on internalization of a societies images and social structures, you could in some sense say most people are predetermined to find people deemed beautiful by the culture to appear beautiful to them on a personal level. There is causes for this, like certain bodies always being the good characters, or just out in public being treated better. So although there is a kind of causal relation to why people find certain people and qualities attractive within a certain societies symbolic structure, that doesn't mean most people raised in that culture won't also exemplify it. And, even if you explain the causes, it won't stop the feeling of being attracted to someone from feeling spontaneous, because it's an unconscious process.

    • @CriticallyAlive
      @CriticallyAlive Год назад

      @@natewikman Couldn't agree more, and that is I think a perfect example of the difference between what Calvinism presents as predestination and what Freud presents as the Id, with maybe a bit of the ego at play in a real social setting. To the viewer, as I imagined it reading your post (viewer being the literal viewer of the societal example of beauty), no matter how much study of either Freud or Calvinism they do, it isn't going to stop that feeling when Elizabeth Olson walks passed them on the sidewalk, which can in turn be deemed as both a predestination to feel attraction on the part of the viewer and/or a predestination to BE attractive on the part of Elizabeth Olson(an example only, to each their own, though that's subversively the point). Those feelings cannot be helped to a certain degree given exactly what you described above, societal expectations, generations of those types of examples, the certain "good bodies", et cetera. But this is where predestination makes, I think, an unforgivable leap of logic. It isn't just saying that these feelings and these drives are what they are because they were always meant to be; it then says the actions that follow those feelings were therefore meant to be. The human behaviors as a result of those internalized, subconscious drives are a predestined result of the conditions that created them and are therefore, morality conveniently excluded, simply the way it was meant to be. There may be much more nuance to the theological principal as Zizek sees it, but that is certainly how it manifests in practice, and I think it is unduly oversimplifying the human experience. It is certainly robbing us of the most important evidence of our true freedom; the ability to make the wrong choice. Suddenly 'wrong' is just a facet of our subconscious drives, driven by social and environmental experience warped, in a way, by our emotional realization of a particular moment, leaving us as what when we're wrong? Advanced misbehaving dogs? Failures of a particular social morality? If it is a social morality in exclusivity, does that default its position as a GOOD morality? It is B. F. Skinner's behaviorism writ large in my view, and in practice it is the precise type of logic used to scientifically justify things like eugenics and fascism. Now, I could be way off of course, but that's how I see it.

    • @CriticallyAlive
      @CriticallyAlive Год назад

      I will add, I am a Christian as well as a follower and lover of Zizek's works so take this at its academic value, but I don't want to seem adversarial for the sake of fighting because I do really agree with you so far.

  • @burlbird9786
    @burlbird9786 6 лет назад +41

    hmmmm..... not sure if I understand the way Zizek understands Calvinist predestination, nor am I sure that Calvinists understand it the way Zizek understands what they understand :)

    • @objectivistathlete
      @objectivistathlete 5 лет назад +12

      I think you'll find that "Calvinists" (the more accurate term would be Reformed Christians) have many different ways of understanding predestination. They are not one unified bloc

    • @jacksobrooks
      @jacksobrooks 5 лет назад +2

      I believe that God has predestined the whole of everything, and that only adds value to it. Turning from evil becomes necessity in light of this, like Zizek mentioned.

    • @AarmOZ84
      @AarmOZ84 4 года назад +6

      If they don't understand what he is saying they were probably not one of the divine elect.

  • @Selver93
    @Selver93 4 года назад +8

    12:32 "Man is not enough" often repeated in Chesterton's Everlasting Man.

    • @kyleoliva2411
      @kyleoliva2411 3 года назад +7

      It's really funny because Chesterton absolutely hated Calvinism.

    • @maxonmendel5757
      @maxonmendel5757 2 года назад +1

      apparently G.K. "Prince of Paradox" Chesterton really influenced Zizek, but I cant find any talks of zizek mentioning GK.
      also, I love zizek mentioning Kieke.

    • @stevensmith1031
      @stevensmith1031 Год назад +1

      @@maxonmendel5757 he mentioned him during the Peterson debate

    • @nightoftheworld
      @nightoftheworld Год назад

      @@maxonmendel5757 look up any of his talks on Christian atheism and Chesterton will be in there-also if you read Zizek’s books or essays on Lacan or religion then you will likely see some Chesterton dropping.

  • @krister6160
    @krister6160 2 года назад +3

    True freedom is when you are under pressure. That's the paradox. You are pressured to either engage or not engage in a war.

    • @briansalzano9771
      @briansalzano9771 2 года назад +1

      Interesting; I always think we don't use our free will until we have to change habit.

  • @EnigmaticNothing
    @EnigmaticNothing 7 лет назад +21

    I can listen to Zizek for hours, but every now and then I wish the man would just get to the fucking point and stay on topic

    • @maxonmendel5757
      @maxonmendel5757 2 года назад +1

      I could listen to him for hours but every now and then I wish the man would just get speech therapy.

  • @VedantaInstituteLosAngeles
    @VedantaInstituteLosAngeles 5 лет назад +8

    Zizek's assertion of "the highest freedom is assuming inner necessity" finds consonance in the allegory of the Bhagavad Gita. At Before the story's war begins, Arjuna is torn between fighting and relinquishing the battle. Krishna educates him that he must choose his innate nature (warrior in a righteous war), and fight because he cannot do otherwise.

  • @dortull
    @dortull 7 лет назад +10

    yes, paradox of free will etc. man has to be decentered, and all that economy of "good" works. wow, this is deep, Logos theology. amen amen.

    • @nitishsalian1354
      @nitishsalian1354 7 лет назад +1

      Doros theos i

    • @nikolamiladinovic8518
      @nikolamiladinovic8518 2 года назад +1

      Thats not a glimpse at what theology really is Orthodox theologians can refute anything he said

  • @ShineThePath
    @ShineThePath Год назад

    It isn't economic exchange for salvation, it is a matter of participation in the life of the holy spirit can only be conducted by willful activity and works in the actual. Gods' essence means they are beyond linear time and inhabit all potentials. It is our determination that brings us towards the grace and love of god.

  • @therubixtesseract
    @therubixtesseract 8 лет назад +49

    50% speed is hilarious. sounds like a sleepy stoned zizek

  • @derpfaddesweisen
    @derpfaddesweisen Год назад +3

    Calvinism is the absence of Christianity. The whole misunderstanding lies in the fact, that Zizek uses our modern conception of freedom, which has nothing to do with the ancient one.

  • @TheodorBjork
    @TheodorBjork 7 лет назад +5

    Where's the rest?

    • @jabohonu
      @jabohonu 5 лет назад +1

      Could you find it ?

  • @mrnoedahl
    @mrnoedahl 2 года назад

    1 Peter 1:2
    who have been chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through the sanctifying work of the Spirit, to be obedient to Jesus Christ and sprinkled with his blood: Grace and peace be yours in abundance.

  • @andrewpearson1903
    @andrewpearson1903 6 лет назад +2

    6:30 This is discussed in non-Protestant theology as well, though -- this is the will of God. We can choose to shrink from the righteous tasks we are given, but there is no way to retain one's honor or soul without cooperating with God's plan for us.
    Cutting stuff, though -- he's right that "man is not enough." One cannot be a holy liberal, and most modern Christians don't seem to recognize this. If they do, they hide it from themselves. I confess that I still do it.

  • @cristoffer5840
    @cristoffer5840 3 года назад +1

    I don't say there is no god, and I don't say there is no meaning. It might be the meaning, no higher, no lesser. Anyway, regarding christs crucifixion, the passion. Is it god revealing himself, or only revealing his will/intention?

  • @ausonius100
    @ausonius100 3 года назад +3

    I think that is right (that Calvinism is the purest form of Christianity). But does not Zizek just say "Protestantism"? He might thereby mean Calvinism (as he probably does), but he dosent directly say it.

    • @rockpaperscissors82
      @rockpaperscissors82  3 года назад +6

      Early on, he refers to Pascal and Port-Royal -- an Augustinian and Calvinist-leaning movement in France ultimately condemned by Rome for its teaching on predestination -- as the closest thing in Catholicism to the Protestantism of which he speaks. He also repeatedly references predestination and even Max Weber's thesis, which specifies Calvinism's influence on capitalism. Thus, while Luther himself believed in double predestination, it's Calvinism (aka Reformed Protestantism) that held most vociferously to the ideas of predestination (aka doctrine of election) and how this glorifies God and humbles man while also elevating man.

    • @ausonius100
      @ausonius100 3 года назад

      @@rockpaperscissors82 Yes, he no doubt very strongly implies it. Both by mentioning the jansenists and talking much about predestination as you say. (did Luther not believe in double predestination early on but later skipped it in favor of election for salvation only, not liking God to elect persons for damnation? Trending in his later years towards less consistency and still more "mystery" in theology)

    • @rockpaperscissors82
      @rockpaperscissors82  3 года назад +1

      @@ausonius100 You might be right about Luther's development on the issue. Bondage of the Will was published in 1525, so fairly early in his career. Maybe he softened his stance in some way later. From what I understand, Melanchthon usually gets credited with Lutheranism's "single predestination," which I honestly find a "have your cake and eat it too" sort of evasion -- wanting the benefits of predestination (salvation is entirely grace, including faith itself) but without the unseemly corollary of reprobation if not all are saved.

    • @ausonius100
      @ausonius100 3 года назад +1

      @@rockpaperscissors82 Yes, I think that is about right. To my knowledge it is accepted that Luther in his later career began moving in the directions of otherwise Melanchtonian "Lutheranism". And so was a kind of co-father to later developments that went away from some clear points of his earlier thinking and teaching.

    • @AarmOZ84
      @AarmOZ84 2 года назад

      In Eastern Orthodoxy, Protestantism and Calvinism are one and the same. They describe a "church" without the proper authority of bishops or tradition that believes that salvation comes direct from God rather than from the church, the sacraments, and the communion of saints. This is predestination in a nutshell: we are saved because of God's action and for no other reason.

  • @devinreese7704
    @devinreese7704 Год назад

    Like Zizek sometimes but an uber rash uber exclusivistic assertion to be sure at best.

  • @lifeisamotherfucker8215
    @lifeisamotherfucker8215 5 лет назад +2

    full lecture : ruclips.net/video/1X_hwUEPelQ/видео.html

  • @anon2867
    @anon2867 Год назад

    Of course he doesn't like orthodoxy, because orthodoxy is True Christianity!

  • @antoniodacunha8989
    @antoniodacunha8989 8 лет назад +1

    too many joints perhaps.

  • @chooselife1509
    @chooselife1509 Год назад

    Let's be real, Zizek sounds like a total fool in this clip. It is truly astounding that anyone would take this man seriously.

  • @devinreese7704
    @devinreese7704 Год назад

    Uhmm So many things wrong with this, to even mention, but if the video agrees with the tagline and title: Who the Hell is Zizek to say in ANY way what the Purest form of Christianity IS, and an even bigger question is EVEN if there IS ONE?

  • @howardcurtis9138
    @howardcurtis9138 Год назад +1

    So, I guess Calvin was predestined to have Michael Cervetus burned at the stake? Kind of lets the sob off the hook!

    • @rockpaperscissors82
      @rockpaperscissors82  Год назад +1

      It was the decision of Geneva's governing council, and Calvin actually advocated with the council for execution by beheading instead of burning, as a more merciful form of death. The council overruled Calvin and went with burning at the stake.

    • @howardcurtis9138
      @howardcurtis9138 Год назад

      @@rockpaperscissors82 Oh, so Calvin's only punishment for someone having a different opinion than his was beheading the offender. Sometimes I wish I could behead people who have a different opinion than my own, but I don't because I had better Sunday School teachers than poor old Calvin! Or is it because civil society decided to reign in those religious fanatics that murder people?

  • @croatianwarmaster7872
    @croatianwarmaster7872 6 лет назад +7

    Traditional Roman Catholicism!!

    • @Jonathan-sd8kg
      @Jonathan-sd8kg 5 лет назад +5

      I would just call it traditional Catholicism. Roman Catholicism is heresy

    • @tonys.5029
      @tonys.5029 3 года назад +1

      @Tommy Andreas Disclaimer, I’m a Calvinist (though I prefer the phrases Biblical Christian and Doctrines of Grace so as to not give the appearance of Corinthian sectarianism) but I’m not looking to debate - RUclips debates almost never go well. However, do you think you could explain what you mean in more detail? I find your thought interesting.

    • @godsstrength7129
      @godsstrength7129 Год назад +1

      Roman Catholics are and always have been the *only* true church since Peter got the keys from Jesus. Calvinism is pure folly.